lyrics of this children’s song vary around the island

Hop-tu-Naa

- a traditional Manx celebration marking the end of the summer and the beginning of winter

Simon Costain
UK Heritage Holiday Island
3 min readOct 4, 2013

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Hop-tu-Naa is a Celtic festival celebrated in the Isle of Man on the 31st of October. Predating Halloween, it is the celebration of the original New Year’s Eve (Oie Houney). The etymology of ‘Hop-tu-naa’ is uncertain, some sources speculating that it comes from Manx Gaelic Shogh ta’n Oie, meaning “this is the night”, though there are a number of origins suggested for the similar Hogmanay, which is the Scottish New Year.

Traditional celebration

For modern Hop-tu-Naa, children dress up and go from house to house with the hope of being given sweets or money, as elsewhere. However, the children carry carved “turnip” lanterns (actually swedes, which are known as turnips or moots by the Manx) rather than pumpkins and sing Hop-tu-naa songs. In older times, children would have also brought the stumps of turnips with them and batter the doors of those who refused to give them any money, in an ancient form of trick or treat. This practice appears to have died out.

Turnip carving

Some of the older customs are similar to those now attached to the January new year. It was a time for prophesying, weather prediction and fortune-telling. Last thing at night, the ashes of a fire were smoothed out on the hearth to receive the imprint of a foot. If, next morning, the track pointed towards the door, someone in the house would die, but if the footprint pointed inward, it indicated a birth.

Turnip lanterns

A cake was made which was called Soddag Valloo or Dumb Cake, because it was made and eaten in silence. Young women and girls all had a hand in baking it on the red embers of the hearth, first helping to mix the ingredients, flour, eggs, eggshells, soot and salt, and kneading the dough. The cake was divided up and eaten in silence and, still without speaking, all who had eaten it went to bed, walking backwards, expecting and hoping to see their future husband in a dream or vision. The future husband was expected to appear in the dream and offer a drink of water.

Another means of divination was to steal a salt herring from a neighbour, roast it over the fire, eat it in silence and retire to bed

In latter years Hop-tu-Naa has become more of a festival for youngsters combining traditional features of the celebration with those of Halloween, Trick-or-treat, Bonfire night, & the Harry Potter franchise.

What’s the difference between Hop-tu-Naa and Halloween? http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-isle-of-man-15337057

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Simon Costain
UK Heritage Holiday Island

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